Unley Oval


Unley Oval is a multi-use, community owned stadium in Unley, an inner southern suburb of Adelaide, South Australia. It is a popular community recreation oval and greenspace and is used for lower-grade South Australian Grade Cricket League matches and is the home ground for the Sturt Football Club in the South Australian National Football League. Originally known as the New Parkside Oval the land, at the time also including what is now the Sturt Bowling Club and the Sturt Lawn Tennis Club, was gifted to the community by Edmund Isaac Stephen Trimmer who in 1881 gave Unley Oval for the use by the people of Unley for “sport and public recreation”.

Overview

The stadium has a capacity of 15,000 people, with seating for up to 2,000. Its record crowd is 24,000 attending a SANFL match between Sturt and Norwood on 9 June 1924 – at the time the highest for any suburban oval in Adelaide. The highest verified attendance was 22,015 for a league game against Port Adelaide during the 1968 season. This would stand as the record SANFL attendance at a suburban ground until 22,738 saw Port Adelaide play Norwood at Port's home ground Alberton Oval in 1977.
Unley Oval was the venue of one first-class match between South Australia and Lord Hawke's XI in 1903; until 2013, it was the only first class match that South Australia had ever hosted away from Adelaide Oval until selected Sheffield Shield games were played at Glenelg Oval from 2014. The match itself was remarkable: South Australia won by 97 runs after following on, and two different bowlers took nine-wicket innings hauls.

Dimensions

The dimensions of the playing surface for football are 160m × 115m. The oval is egg-shaped, such that the northern end is more narrow and has shallower pockets than the southern end. Unley Oval has two main grandstands located on the western side of the ground; the newer of the two stands, "The Jack Oatey Stand", is open to the public and seats 1,500, and the Members Stand which seats 500 people.
Unley Oval, like other SANFL club home grounds, is a community-owned facility. However, it stands out for offering greater public access compared to other venues. From 1998, when Sturt Football Club recommenced playing its home games at the Oval, to 2025 temporary fencing was installed on match days — at a cost of over $1 million cumulatively. In 2025, the City of Unley resolved to build a permanent fence around the football ground portion of Unley Oval. This new fence will include public access points and does not affect the existing permanent fencing around the adjacent Bowls Club and Tennis Club. Sturt Football Club has committed an investment of $360,000 towards the project.

Name

Unley Oval has had several temporary sponsor names during the football season including "Envestra Park", "House Brothers Oval", and "Commander Centre Oval", under various sponsorship deals. In 2015 Unley Oval was renamed Peter Motley Oval in honour of former Sturt champion and club #1 ticket holder Peter Motley. In late 2021, another sponsorship deal was taken changing the name to Wigan Oval until late 2023 when it was changed to Thomas Farms Oval.